Why I do not need TV
Trapped!
Had a few appointments in town and we had run out of dog food, milk and cheap B flicks so, today, we headed over to ‘end-of’-the-road’ to pick up our car and head in. It has been 15 days since we were last in town.
Eor is so-called because it is the end of the logging road on the next island over that, at one end, leads to the first smattering of on-the-gridders (the ones who have TVs and telephones, garbage pick-up, fire protection and police traffic harassment presumably in exchange for the the convenience of a store). The other very end of the Eor is an incline of about 250 feet of gravel road at a 20 to 25 degree angle. It is a steep hill that is relatively easy to negotiate if you have 4WD but it becomes a bit more problematic if there is snow.
And there was.
A 4WD neighbour had made an attempt earlier to leave the mid-slope parking area and his truck was at the bottom of the hill. He didn’t make it. It didn’t even look like he made much of an attempt at getting up, really. I assumed that he slid down the hill and realized at once that getting up was not going to happen. The truck was abandoned with it’s wheels in the beach water (high tide) and he had gone home.
Since I was currently parked next to where he had been, I decided to pass on my attempt. No sense in two trucks being there. We went back home in the boat that brung us.
We have been trapped before by weather but who hasn’t? You can be in Richmond and get ‘snowed in’. But this was the first time we kinda needed to get out and couldn’t. This was the first time I felt a bit trapped. I mean, really…….no milk for my tea, dogs get nothing but kibble, no movies and a missed appointment or two……….hardly anything to complain about. Still, I felt a bit trapped.
But it was notable that, in the past 5 years, we have not been restricted completely by our remoteness except this time and maybe one other (can’t remember). Generally speaking, we can get out or get by without any real inconvenience. And, even this time, the inconvenience is mostly to the appointments (they have schedules) rather than me. I mean; I am not complaining. I am kind of surprised. Five years on a remote island and inconvenienced so rarely I can’t even remember the second time…..if there was one.
Don’t get me wrong – there have been storms that only fools would go out in and so we didn’t even think about it. But neither did we have to. There have been storms that eliminated travel to places we wanted to go but they weren’t pressing – we could go another day. And there have been storms that limited us but not others whose vessels were more up to the challenge – so, in a sense, we were not ‘cut off’. We could call a neighbour if it was that pressing.
There are obstacles out here that you can’t get past. To be sure. But the main one is the logging road on the ‘connector’ island, not so much the sea. Trees regularly fall across that road in big storms and, when they do, they don’t fall alone. In big storms it is not uncommon for a dozen or more big trees to block the road. Even with a chainsaw (some guys always carry one after a storm), there can be too much fibre on the road to make a town trip worthwhile. When that happens, we let the road crew do it. And travel a few days later.
Today, we will let the milder temperatures and the rain do the job for us. Maybe we can go tomorrow.
Interesting…….experiment is over
Glimpsing Hell
She’s a Woofer
The Habit of Sheds
Musing
Living off the grid has connotations. For some, it is seen as just a benign lifestyle choice; an appreciation for nature or a respite from the hurly burly. For others it is perceived as a bit of a moral choice to live more simply or less materially – sort of like being a vegan or ‘going green’. I am sure there are other ‘points of view’ on it depending on the person. And, for many, there is the implication that the off-the-gridder has ‘abandoned’ society and gone feral in a bid to survive the coming apocalypse. Or something like that. Something desperate, something primal.
All of those are reasons to change as we have done but they miss the most obvious reason: change for the sake of it.
None of those things listed first above were my primary motivation. My primary motivation was boredom. I like change more than stability. Change is my muse.
Sally and I had done the cul-de-sac to death. We had lived on boats, in apartments and houses – even mansions. We had traveled. We had pursued a variety of career choices, too. We have, in fact, enjoyed a series of life changes without any of them being imposed on us by family, health or politics. Those were all life-altering choices and we chose them freely.
For us, it was about interest, learning, curiosity, personal growth and the exercise of freedom. It was not philosophical in any particular way other than in the sense of learning, meeting manageable challenges and feeling alive. In a word: change.
If that continues to hold true for us, then we are likely to change again at least once more, maybe two more times given that each ‘lifestyle’ change so far has taken about ten years to cycle through.
But I have a feeling that the need for ‘changing it up’ is not quite as true for us anymore. It may just be our age. After a while of living, especially one that we considered was full and satisfying, there is the sense of ‘having done it’. Been there, done that.
It may be that this is so far and away the best place to live that the big search is over. We have been looking for something and now we have found it – whatever it was. Now, maybe, the searching will be for small improvements only; refinements on a theme, as it were.
Or it may be that the world seems to be going to hell in a hand-basket and who needs any part of that!?
I don’t know. I do know that I am more content than ever before. I do know that this lifestyle suits me better than most other things, places and activities, especially at this age. And I do know that it seems like the world is a very hot hand-basket these days. But I also know that I have felt that satisfaction before and it eventually changes to wanting something different.
If those same old feelings will again revisit us, what could the next thing be?
Thinking of who to sue
Beautiful day! Cold, bright, sunny. The sea is calm. It is the kind of day you say to yourself, “Wow! Today would be a good day to go and do such-and-such!”
And then you bundle up, get your tools and head out to undertake the task-at-hand only to feel your hands go numb and your nose-hairs get needle-hard. Then your ears fall off. It is really too cold to do anything and, like the bunny-kins you really are, you quickly retreat to the warmth of the cabin and make yourself a nice hot chocolate.
Well, I do, anyway.
I know, I know………..all you easterners and prairie-types think you know cold and -3F is NOT cold, you say. But it is! Cold near the water is colder than the dry-ice type cold of the interior. That’s what everyone says and this time I believe them. Hell, that interior kind of cold isn’t really cold until it is 25 below. You want real cold? Try 25 below in a storm on the coast when the ocean freezes spray on your face!
‘Course, I am just talkin’ big because I don’t even think about going out when it is -5 degrees. I mean, ‘who am I trying to impress?’
I mention all this because I have been checking in lately with Chris Czajkowski, the author. Chris Czajkowski of Nuk Tessli goes out in this and doesn’t think twice. She is the intrepid, gettin’-on, single woman who has carved a lifestyle and reputation out of the wilderness for the past thirty years up and around the Caribou/Chilcotin area. It gets to 50 below up there! She used to hike by snowshoe for four days into her cabin alone except for a dog for company and built her cabin by hand and axe. She is a tough chick – one of those eccentric, bicycle-across-the-Himalaya English-types who do it alone and live on only crackers and cheese. Like Sal.
CC was one of the inspirations for the adventure Sal and I are currently on. Sally and Ian Wilson (two adventurers in the 80’s and 90’s) were two more and the gang at the Mother Earth News forum added to the urge-to-homestead, off-the-grid madness we have embraced with their encouragement and knowledge.
In other words, we have plenty of people on whom to spread the blame.
From little acorns………
It’s January and time to start planning the crops! The last of our seed catalogs has arrived and we have to order in the seed to till and plant the back 40.
Feet, that is.
Talk about transplanting the yuppie view of the world, eh? We have something like 48 square feet of garden all ‘sitting pretty’ in the planters I built and, counting all three seed and garden catalogs that have arrived so far,we have approximately 250 square feet of fancy-coloured printed page! That’s right…….5 square feet of glossy catalog for every square foot of garden. I call that the yuppie ratio. Magazine space vs the real thing. The YR shows up in Lee valley catalogs, too. I have almost enough LV catalogs to build an Adirondack deck chair.
Given our pathetic gardening track record there is no way we can justify taking a tree to make the paper to publish the catalog to make us buy the seeds that grow virtually nothing edible but Marigolds and the squash from Hell.
It ain’t easy being green and a hip consumer but Lee Valley and Versey Seeds are trying to bridge the gap for us all. And I am having to build another gardening box this year in an effort to justify their work. To me, this is just an exercise in exercise.
Sally is hooked, however. She poured over the latest seed catalog from West Coast seed reading the write-ups on turnips, vintage grape strains, multi-hued tomatoes and heritage apples and pears conveniently ignoring the fact that we are located on solid granite and any apple trees grown in raised planters produce very little in the way of pie filling.
“Oooh, I think we should plant spinach and kale this year. What do you think?”
“Well, we grew kale last year and fed it all to the dogs. We also grew Marigolds that grew like billy-o and we didn’t eat any – but they were at least very pretty. And let us not forget the squash from the little shop of horrors that we not only didn’t eat, we were afraid to make angry! And then there was the half ton of green tomatoes that covered the living room for a week waiting to ripen that, come to think of it, I have not seen hide nor hair of since.”
“Yeah. We have to pick more carefully this time, I guess. I was just surprised that anything grew at all. It was so much fun!”
I love her attitude. But it is not a reality-based view from behind those beautiful eyes. She sees the garden of Eden. I see a box not much larger than a coffin………beckoning. Our visions conflict. I suspect that we’ll have a ‘mixed salad’ of things that we toil over and yet our diet will change very little. It is Save-on based if you must know. We’ll buy organic, of course, and be sure to get our produce from within 100 miles but somehow not very much will come from within the nearest 100 feet. Of that, I am pretty sure.
Maybe some squash.
The Marigolds, however, will grace the table almost all year and for that alone, it is all worth it.